Posted on 07/02/2022 5:26:46 AM PDT by NautiNurse
A small area of low pressure formed along a surface trough just offshore of Savannah, Georgia, yesterday morning and moved inland across the Lowcountry of South Carolina by the evening. Deep convection formed near the low center as it was moving inland and has persisted and become better organized over the past 6 to 12 hours.
Mash the graphics below to enlarge. All links and images are self-updating.
Yep, it's all about using up the list of names every season.
The worst of the “Tropical Storm” is over! Lasted about 15 minutes!
I’ve passed wind that was more deserving of an official name from the NWS especially the day after a dinner of my wifes Chilli or a binge at Toca Hell. I mean Bell!
In Eisenhower’s farewell speech, right after the part where he warns of the military-industrial complex, he also warns of government-big science collusion.
He was a very prescient man.
Yup.
Maybe they’re controlling it. I’d just about believe anything these days, and Alex Jones has been proven right about a lot of things recently.
Is this the first NN mash list of the summer? If so, do people want to contribute links or ideas for later use when there is a real storm?
South Carolina Ping
If you'd like to be on or off the South Carolina ping list, just click Private Reply below and drop me a FReepmail.
Waiting for it in the Northern Outer Banks. Check in and check out traffic bad enough on a normal 7/4 weekend. Starting to get messy right now at 10:30.
The operative thing for me is not ‘controlling the weather” but it is “exaggerating the weather” just like IMHO COVID was hyped exaggeration to manipulate public opinion.
Thanks for the ping!
bump to the top
This is a sneaker storm.
I wonder how many people are going to lose their tent camping on the beach at Cape Lookout. July 4 is a huge week for that and the park isn’t evacuating.
WTNT43 KNHC 030844 TCDAT3
Remnants Of Colin Discussion Number 5 NWS National Hurricane Center Miami FL AL032022 500 AM EDT Sun Jul 03 2022
Colin no longer has a discernible center or closed circulation in satellite imagery or surface observations, and it has therefore dissipated over eastern North Carolina. The remnants are generating a line of convection mainly offshore the North Carolina coast, where buoy reports and earlier ASCAT data indicate that maximum winds are now down to 25 kt.
Colin's remnants are moving a little faster toward the northeast (055/9 kt) and are expected to turn east-northeastward and accelerate soon, crossing the Outer Banks and emerging over the Atlantic waters this afternoon. The remnants are then expected to merge with a frontal system over the western Atlantic in about 24 hours.
This is the last advisory on Colin. For additional information, please see products issued by the local National Weather Service forecast offices in Morehead City and Wilmington, North Carolina. Also refer to High Seas Forecasts issued by the National Weather Service, under AWIPS header NFDHSFAT1, WMO header FZNT01 KWBC, and online at ocean.weather.gov/shtml/NFDHSFAT1.php
The Storm that should never have been named...
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